Kent Messenger Maidstone

No proof to convict crash death driver, judge rules

- By Keith Hunt and Julia Roberts messengern­ews@ thekmgroup.co.uk @KM_newsroom

A van driver was cleared of causing the death of a motorcycli­st after a judge said there was not enough evidence to convict him.

Maidstone Crown Court heard how Christophe­r Worthingto­n was catapulted through the air and suffered fatal injuries following a collision with Steven Ormond’s Ford Transit.

But the trial was halted at the end of the prosecutio­n case on Wednesday, when Judge David Griffith-Jones QC directed the jury of 10 men and two women to acquit Mr Ormond of causing death by careless driving.

“The reason is quite simple,” he said. “As a matter of law, on the basis of the evidence produced, I take the view the only proper verdict is one of not guilty.”

Mr Worthingto­n, 37, was riding his motorbike along the A229 at the bottom of Linton Hill when the tragedy happened on the morning of October 17 last year.

Mr Ormond, who denied the charge, was turning right across the oncoming traffic and on to the B2079 towards Marden.

The motorcycle collided with the front offside of the van.

Mr Worthingto­n, who was married and lived in Jaggard Way, Staplehurs­t, died at the scene. His helmet was later found in a hedge.

Mr Ormond, of Darwin Rise, Northfleet, was driving a van owned by Maidstone firm G Baker Roofing. He told police he had started to turn right when he saw the motorcycli­st “flying” around the corner.

He said he tried to swerve out of the way but was moving too slowly, and that he had not heard the motorbike approachin­g. He estimated its speed as 50mph. The limit was 60mph.

A witness, who seconds earlier had pulled out of the junction Mr Ormond was waiting to turn into, told officers the van was moving “extremely slowly”.

Prosecutor Nigel May told jurors: “If Steven Ormond had been exercising that degree of care, the accident simply would not have happened.”

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